Before She Dies

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Before She Dies Page 8

by Steven F Havill


  The Broken Spur Saloon and Trading Post was cave dark, and our eyes, tired from a day of squinting into the New Mexico winter sun, were slow to adjust.

  I stepped in the door and stopped next to the cigarette machine. Across a faded, scuffed Mexican imitation of a Navajo rug was a glass counter full of belt buckles, packets labeled as rattlesnake eggs, porcelain figurines, and other detritus that must have attracted tourists now and then. Maybe if I had to live in some place like Cleveland I’d get a kick out of showing my friends the New Mexico scorpion encased in plastic that I’d bought “right down there near the border.”

  My gaze drifted up to the zoo of antelope trophies gathering dust on the dingy white plastered wall. Two big buck pronghorns kept musty vigil over a piece of plywood framed with braided rope. The plywood displayed a collection of “Barbbed Wire of Posadas County.” There must have been fifty varieties of rusted wire tacked to the mount, with some dating back to the late 1870s when they were first patented. By the 1940s, most of the county ranchers had decided it wasn’t so much barbed wire that they needed for successful cow-calf operations as it was rainfall.

  “Two for dinner, sir?”

  I hadn’t heard the girl approach, and I turned with a start. The hostess smiled pleasantly, her plump, acne-scarred face framed by long, curly black hair. She was the kind of kid who probably didn’t turn many sober heads now, but when she reached fifty she would have grown into her features. Her gaze shifted from me to Estelle and back again.

  “Is Victor here?” I asked.

  “Mr. Sánchez? Let me go see.”

  The bar was through a doorway to the left. To the right was a small dining room. Straight down the hall was the kitchen, and the hostess headed that way. Estelle browsed the foyer and then stepped briefly into the bar. I didn’t follow. The tobacco smoke would be thick and I didn’t need the temptation. The cigarette machine behind me was bad enough.

  I saw the hostess stop in the kitchen doorway, leaning against the doorjamb as if she weren’t allowed to trespass. After a minute’s earnest conversation, she recoiled a step and Victor Sánchez appeared, a large carving knife in one hand and a bunch of celery in the other. He looked out at us and then waved the celery in dismissal. He disappeared and the hostess turned and smiled at us hopefully, maybe thinking that we’d see the obvious and leave.

  I remained rooted under the Barbbed wire, so she padded back down the hall, her head down in that “please don’t kill the messenger” posture she’d probably learned early in this job.

  “Mr. Sánchez said he can’t talk with you now.”

  “Ah, busy night, huh,” I said. The girl nodded, her face brightening with the hope that I wasn’t going to be as cranky as I looked.

  I stepped past her and walked down the hall toward the kitchen. The hostess didn’t object or offer to present me to his highness. She murmured something to Estelle and then vanished into the bar to deal with customers she understood.

  The kitchen smelled of Saturday night’s fajitas, grilling hamburger, and cleaning compounds. Victor Sánchez was working at the cutting board, chattering the celery into slivers with the knife. He looked up and saw Estelle and me standing in the doorway. He stopped cutting.

  “I said I was busy.”

  “I see that,” I said.

  Sánchez was a squat man, beefy through the shoulders with short, muscular arms, thick wrists, and powerful, stubby-fingered hands. He tipped the board of celery into a bowl and turned toward the stove.

  “You want something to eat?”

  “No, thanks. I guess not.” I did, but Sánchez was fixing something that looked and smelled like chicken soup, and as far as I was concerned, that was health food.

  “Y tú?” he asked Estelle. I knew about ten words of Spanish, just enough to be surprised at the familiar greeting.

  She shook her head. “Queremos unos pocos minutos de tú tiempo, señor,” she said.

  Sánchez banged the bowl down on the table and turned to glare at us. I knew the look—I’d used it myself many times in the marines when conversing with idiot recruits.

  “You know how many people I talk to today, querida?” Estelle’s face remained impassive. He took a step closer and shook a stubby finger in her face. “All day long, in and out, in and out. Like flies. They ask, what’s this, what’s this, what’s this?”

  “What do you expect?” I said quietly when he paused to take a breath. “One of our officers was killed just down the road. Do you think we’re going to wait until there’s a lull in your bar traffic to talk to you?”

  Sánchez dropped the knife on the cutting board and wiped his hands on his clean, starched apron. “What does this place have to do with what happened?” he demanded. He turned back to Estelle and hunched his shoulders like an old bulldog. His words came machine-gun fast, and I guess maybe he thought Estelle would flinch. She listened impassively. “Nada pasaba aquí. Nada. Ni siquiera una persona vio nada. Ahora, quita de medio.” He chopped the air with the edge of his palm.

  “He said nothing happened here, that no one saw anything… and to get out of his way,” Estelle said to me. Victor grunted.

  He waved a hand in my direction. “He knows damn well what I said, chinita. All these cops, you drive away my customers. You cost me money.”

  He turned back to his celery and dumped it into a stainless steel cooking pot on the stove. The tidbits disappeared into the bubbling soup and my stomach twinged a little with anticipation.

  “Victor,” I said using my most conciliatory tone, “one of your customers might remember something. In a case like this, we don’t have much to go on. Any little detail that someone might remember. It could help us. Anything that happened that was even a little unusual.”

  Several pieces of chicken were spread out on the cutting board as Sánchez went to work with the big knife, deftly separating skin and excess fat. He studiously ignored the two of us. As far as he was concerned, the conversation was over.

  Estelle stepped close to the table and leaned over so that she was talking within two inches of Victor Sánchez’s ear. I saw one of his eyebrows rise a little.

  “He oido decir que alguien cerca de aquí sabe mas,” she said, her voice husky. “Con tú ayuda…”

  Victor Sánchez straightened up slowly, the knife motionless on the cutting board. He looked at me and grinned, at the same time nodding his head toward Estelle as if to tell me he knew he’d almost stepped in it.

  “You tell your compadres, señor, that if I think of something I’ll let you know.” He pointed directly at Estelle. “Tú, chinita, solamente.” He pointed then at the door behind us. “Now leave me alone to my work. You want something else, you bring a warrant.”

  Estelle ignored Sánchez’s dismissal and instead pulled out a small notebook from her purse. She leaned against the prep table and leafed through the pages.

  “Señor, you told one of the deputies earlier that Francisco Peña came in at twelve minutes after eleven and shouted that there had been a shooting.”

  Sánchez grunted something I didn’t hear. “How did you happen to know it was twelve after eleven?” Estelle asked.

  “Because I was standing at the bar and happened to be facing the door.”

  Estelle flipped forward a page in her notes. “And there is a clock right by the door, sir.”

  Sánchez looked up sharply at her. “Basta, you think I didn’t tell the truth…”

  Estelle shook her head. “I need to make sure that the deputy who told me was correct, señor. You told him that Francisco busted in like maybe he had an accident or something. And then?”

  “You know the story as good as me,” Sánchez muttered as he hacked at the chicken.

  Estelle dutifully continued. “After Francisco settled down enough to tell you what was wrong, you called the state police. The nine-one-one relay connected you with the Sheriff’s Department. Most of your customers went outside, and at least four of them drove down the road to the scene.”
/>   “Six of them went outside. I told ’em no toquen alguna cosa…nothing,” Sánchez said. He wagged a finger. “Don’t touch nothing.”

  “All right. So…” I turned to Estelle quizzically.

  “Mr. Sánchez said that last night he had no patrons other than those known to him. I have a list here, if you want to see them.”

  I shook my head. “So, no strangers in the place all evening?”

  “That’s right,” Sánchez muttered.

  “And there were no disturbances of any kind that amounted to anything, no luchas?” Estelle prompted.

  Victor Sánchez dumped a pile of hacked chicken into the soup pot and walked over to a refrigerator to collect a package of baby carrots. He took a deep breath as if becoming resigned to our presence.

  He spilled the carrots out on the board, slicing each one lengthwise and then across, building a mound of perfect little carrot quarters. After processing about ten, Sánchez shrugged. “Pat Torrance, he drank too much. It looked like he was going to puke, so I asked him to go out back before he made a mess of my bar.”

  “And that’s all? One drunk cowboy?”

  “Es todo.”

  “It appears that it was a pretty quiet night up until then, sir,” Estelle said to me. “No strangers, nothing unusual.” She closed her notebook and slipped it back in her purse. “Mr. Sánchez, when was the last time you spoke with Sergeant Torrez?”

  For a moment, Victor Sánchez’s face was blank. Estelle folded her arms and leaned against the table. “The deputy who arrested Tammy Woodruff, sir.”

  Sánchez’s eyes narrowed. “Conózcolo, señorita.” Estelle ignored the emphasis Sánchez placed on the jibe at her age and appearance. True enough, Estelle Reyes-Guzman was far from matronly.

  She smiled faintly. “Bueno. Cuando estaba el tiempo último cuando hablaba con él?” Sánchez shot a sideways glance at me. I raised an eyebrow as if I understood Estelle perfectly and was waiting for an answer.

  “I spoke with him Friday night only.”

  “Not since then?”

  “No.”

  Estelle looked down at the growing pile of carrots. “Did someone mention to you last night…after Francisco and the others left and the police came…did someone mention to you which patrol car was involved in the shooting? Did someone mention who the deputy was?”

  It was Sánchez’s turn to look puzzled, and if he was faking it, he was a great actor.

  “Nobody said nothing about which one, señora. I found out that it was Paul Enciños only after Pat Torrance came back and told me that is who it was.”

  “Torrance was recovered by then?”

  Sánchez shrugged and almost smiled. “Podria andar. But he did not go down to the place. He said he heard from someone else out in the parking lot that it was Enciños. I know him, you know. I know his family.”

  “Enciños, you mean?”

  “Yes.”

  “But no one said anything about which patrol car was involved?”

  Sánchez cocked his head and frowned at Estelle. “No. What difference does it make?”

  She didn’t answer but pushed away from the table as Sánchez collected the last of the carrots for the soup.

  “Sir, thank you. If there’s anything else, I’ll be in touch.”

  Sánchez shook his head and started toward the refrigerator again. “No más, chiquita, no más.”

  We stepped outside. Beyond the circle of the sodium-vapor light in the parking lot, the prairie stretched away into the chilled darkness of that February evening.

  “He’s got all kinds of pet names for you, doesn’t he?” I asked. “What’s chinita mean?”

  Estelle smiled wearily. “Around here, you’d translate it about like, ‘little half-breed darling.’”

  “Cute. He’s a sweetheart, isn’t he?”

  “He’s known my family for generations, sir. He knew my Great-uncle Reuben. In fact, Reuben built one of the fireplaces in the barroom for him. Years ago.”

  “I should have known. You asked about the patrol car. You don’t seriously believe that the killer thought that Paul Enciños was someone else? Bob Torrez told me earlier that he was thinking the same thing.”

  Estelle shook her head. “No, sir. I don’t think anyone would notice the number on a patrol car. I just wanted to see the look on Victor Sánchez’s face. That’s all.”

  “No connection?”

  “No connection, sir.”

  I sighed. “You want to go down to the hospital with me for a bit?”

  “If you’ll stop on the way for something to eat, sir.”

  I laughed. “I didn’t think you ever stopped to eat, drink, sleep…”

  Estelle grinned. “No, sir. You need something to eat. I saw you watching that soup. And I want to show you something.”

  My spirits lifted. Earlier, while parked behind the highway department’s gravel pile, Estelle hadn’t just been ruminating about Victor Sánchez. There was something else brewing in her mind.

  Chapter 12

  I was too tired and depressed to care much about eating, and that alone said something about my condition that evening. Because she wanted to talk on the telephone privately with her husband, Estelle suggested we meet at her house.

  Francis Guzman’s aunt met us at the door. She frowned hard at Estelle and muttered something in Spanish that I didn’t catch. I recognized the word that had something to do with sleep, and true enough, we both had ten-gallon bags under our eyes. But that wasn’t unusual. The entire department would be operating on fumes if something didn’t break quickly.

  Señora Tournál wore a tailored blue suit of casual cut, the white blouse fluffed and lacy at the throat. Her black shoes were mirror-perfect. She was not the image of the perfect nanny. Rather, she looked like she was waiting for a tardy junior partner to arrive so that she could begin a board meeting.

  Sofia Tournál had no children of her own. I wondered if, behind that handsome face that registered only concern for her niece, Mrs. Tournál really enjoyed being corralled as a baby-sitter.

  As if she could read my mind, Sofia Tournál glanced at me and offered a half smile. “The kid is asleep, Estellita.”

  Estelle nodded. “We’re going to be in and out. I’m sorry.”

  “No tengas lástima,” Sofia said, and ushered us toward the dining room table—Estelle’s office.

  “No tú invitamos para ser nana para el niño, Sofia,” Estelle said, and hugged the older woman.

  She waved a hand in dismissal. “Por un día o dos.” Sofia Tournál may not have minded baby-sitting the kid for a day or two, but spending those days near a hot stove wasn’t in her plans.

  Her favorite solution to immediate food problems was American fast food—and her particular passion was fried chicken, the higher the cholesterol the better. She didn’t even cast a second glance at my girth as she vanished out the door, Estelle’s car keys in hand, headed off to fetch a barrel of the crunchy stuff. She knew where my heart was.

  I settled in one of the chairs near an uncluttered spot on the table and heaved a sigh.

  “Are you all right?” Estelle called from the kitchen.

  “Yeah, I guess,” I said, not convinced.

  She reappeared and set a tall glass of orange juice in front of me. I grimaced. “You got anything to put in this?”

  She grinned and ignored my request. Instead she opened her briefcase and drew out a large, clear plastic evidence bag containing what looked like a streamlined socket wrench with no handle. “I found this off the shoulder of the highway,” Estelle said, and handed it to me. While I looked at the wrench, she fished a piece of graph paper from her briefcase. “Right here.”

  She had drawn the deputy’s patrol car and then labeled everything else with distance flags. The wrench had been lying sixty-five inches from the edge of the pavement, thirty-five feet in front of patrol car 308.

  “You want to tell me how anyone missed this?” I asked. Estelle shrugged and I added, “W
e all walked through that area a hundred times. This thing is what, about a foot long?”

  “Nestled in a clump of rice grass,” Estelle said. “The way it was lying, it was obvious that it was dropped recently.”

  “How so?”

  “Nothing on top of it. Not even dust.”

  I held the bag by the zipper lock and turned it this way and that. “It’s brand-new.”

  “Just a few scratches. Do you know what it is?”

  “Sure. It’s a lug wrench…or part of one. The ratchet part. And you’re right. No dust, nothing. You could have one of these stowed in your vehicle for years, and never use it. But it would collect dust and dirt with the passage of time. This one is clean as a whistle.”

  “Brand spanking new,” Estelle said.

  “So, you found a lug wrench,” I said. “Or half of one. This part fits over the lug nuts…or the jackscrew.” I made little twisting motions with my hands and the tiny crow’s-feet at the corners of Estelle’s eyes deepened ever so slightly. “There’s another part, the actual ratchet handle, that slips over this end.”

  “General Motors has been using those since about 1988,” Estelle added. She pointed with the tip of her pencil. “There are a few marks on the black paint where the handle was attached, sir.”

  I frowned. “So…we’ve got half of a lug wrench. It may have been dropped recently. It’s from one of the major manufacturers, which means that we’ve narrowed the vehicle down to one in a couple billion.”

  Estelle nodded. “Since we’re starting with nothing, this,” she said tapping the bag, “is more than we had.”

  “I won’t argue that,” I replied. “You’re going to run it for prints?”

  “Tonight.” She leaned forward. “Sir, this might be connected.”

  “It might be.”

  “If someone had a flat tire and stopped to change it, it’s easy to imagine that in the dark, one piece or another of that wrench could be dropped, or kicked, or misplaced somehow. If the person was unfamiliar with the equipment, it’s even more possible. If that person was in a hurry, or nervous, it might be even more likely.”

 

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